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  1. Alexander Vasilchikov. Alexander Semyonovich Vasilchikov ( Russian: Александр Семёнович Васильчиков, tr. Aleksandr Semënovič Vasil'čikov; 1746–1813) was a Russian aristocrat who became the lover of Catherine the Great from 1772 to 1774. Vasilchikov was an ensign in the Chevalier Guard Regiment when he was noted ...

    • She Married Into The Russian Royal Family at 16
    • Orlov Helped Overthrow Her Husband — and Plotted His Death
    • Catherine Was 'Broken' When Partner Grigory Potemkin Died
    • In Reality, Catherine 'Loved to Be in Love'

    Forced into an arranged marriage in 1745 at the age of 16 to her second cousin, Karl Peter Ulrich or Peter IIIof the Russian royal family, Catherine was miserable from the start, having to deal with his immature and alcoholic ways. One mark of his childlike state: his obsession with playing with toy soldiers. This left Catherine lonely — even after...

    When Elizabeth died on Christmas Day in 1761, Peter III took over the throne and immediately ended Russia’s war with Prussia, which angered nobles and the military, and also took away land from the Orthodox church. At this time, Catherine was involved with Orlov. Her choice of romantic partners in high places helped her work with Orlov to stage her...

    Ironically, it was the day that Orlov helped overthrow her husbandthat Catherine ended up meeting the man who would become her greatest lover. Grigory Potemkin was part of the guard that overthrew Peter III. The nobleman had made a name for himself during the Russo-Turkish War. Though she also dated Alexander Vasilchikov from about 1772 to 1774, th...

    Even during her lifetime, Catherine couldn’t escape the talk about her love life. There are stories out there about her associated with nymphomania, bestiality, voyeurism — and even a love of erotic furniture. And perhaps the most notorious mythis that she died making love to a horse. In actuality, she passed away after she suffered a stroke at 67 ...

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  3. Jan 5, 2021 · Alexander Vasilchikov Vasilchikov was another aristocrat and soldier who was strategically placed in Catherine’s eyeline as a means of removing Orlov from her bed. Whilst he was awarded all the privilege and prestige expected by the empress’ lover, he was also a virtual prisoner: Catherine forbade him from leaving the palace without her ...

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  4. Catherine was intelligent and ambitious. During her husband's lifetime, she had at least three lovers and, if her hints are to be believed, none of her children were his. It is thought that she had affairs with Alexander Vasilchikov, Sergei Saltykov and Stanislaw August Poniatowski, among others.

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  5. Catherine’s next lover was Russian aristocrat Alexander Vasilchikov, a man who paled in comparison to her previous love. Their relationship was shortlived and he was replaced as her favourite and consort by Grigory Potemkin in 1774, perhaps the most famous of all her lovers.

  6. Nov 27, 2018 · When in August 1772 Orlov left court, Catherine took another lover, Alexander Vasilchikov. But this relationship did not last long: Vasilchikov was replaced in 1774 with Grigory Potemkin, who...

  7. Nov 18, 2019 · One scene in HBO’s Catherine the Great, in which Mirren’s Catherine tasks the youthful and handsome Vasilchikov with telling her something interesting in her bedchamber, is almost identical to ...

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